The next morning arrived the way mornings always did in the sanctuary—gradually, then all at once.
Light crept through the ironwood vines first. Then birdsong from the ridge. Then, with the inevitability of water finding its level, the sounds of six snakelings who had been patient for approximately as long as snakelings were capable of being patient, which was until roughly dawn.
"They’re ready," Jade announced from the entrance of the alcove, in the tone of soone delivering a formal report. He had arranged his siblings behind him in what was clearly ant to be an orderly line, and had achieved sothing that was orderly only if you were grading on a very generous curve. Ripple was pressed against his side. Sterling had Onyx’s tail wrapped around his wrist. River was at the back, watching everything. Siddy was technically in the line but had interpreted "line" as a flexible concept.
"Ready for what?" Alex asked, though he already knew.
"To et them," Jade said. "Properly. We were told yesterday and then sent away, which was—" He paused, clearly editing his original word choice. "—understandable. But now it’s morning and they’ve slept and we’ve slept and we are ready to et our siblings." From behind Jade, Ripple added: "I made them sothing."
He held up a small woven band—grass and soft leather and, inexplicably, a piece of Granite’s fur, knotted together with the particular careful imprecision of small fingers doing their best. There were four of them. One for each.
Alex’s throat tightened.
"Co in," he said. "Quietly."
Quietly lasted approximately ninety seconds.
Siddy lasted the least long. He entered the alcove with admirable restraint, got his first look at Liam—burnished gold and broad-shouldered even at one day old, currently awake and conducting his habitual threat assessnt of the room—and imdiately forgot every instruction he’d ever received.
"HE’S HUGE," Siddy whispered, which was not a whisper.
Liam’s golden eyes locked onto Siddy with the focused attention he gave to everything.
Siddy froze.
"He’s looking at ," Siddy said, at slightly reduced volu. "Mama, he’s looking at . He’s deciding sothing. What is he deciding? Why does he look like Father Leo when Father Leo is about to make a speech—"
"He’s deciding if you’re a threat," River said calmly, from where he’d positioned himself beside Raj—the pale, thick-maned third-born, who was awake and appeared to be conducting his own quiet assessnt of the snakelings with the unhurried certainty of soone who had nowhere else to be.
"Am I a threat?" Siddy asked.
"Probably not," River said. "But he doesn’t know that yet."
Siddy considered this, then made a decision that was very Siddy: he lowered himself until he was flat on the floor, belly-scales against the stone, and looked at Liam from ground level. A gesture of non-aggression, if a serpent’s non-aggression could also sohow look challenging.
Liam stared at him.
Then made the small, grumbling sound that had already beco recognizable as his version of provisional acceptance.
[SIBLING INTERACTION LOG, DAY ONE,]
System noted privately to Alex. [Siddy has correctly intuited that direct eye contact at a lower elevation reduces perceived threat. Whether this was intentional or instinctual is unclear. Logging as ’unclear’ for now.]
Jade had approached Solara with the formal gravity he brought to all introductions, settling himself at a careful distance and waiting for her to look at him rather than approaching closer.
She looked at him.
He looked back.
"I’m Jade," he said. "The eldest. I’ll be responsible for making sure you learn the important things."
Solara blinked—one blue eye, one gold. Her small ear flicked.
"She agrees," River translated.
"You don’t know that," Sterling said.
"She flicked her ear," River said. "That’s agreent."
"That’s just ear-flicking—"
"Agreent ear-flick is different from response ear-flick," River said, with the certainty of soone who had spent one full day observing lion cub communication and considered himself qualified to speak on the subject. "The angle was approximately fifteen degrees toward Jade. That’s attention and acknowledgnt. Agreent."
Sterling stared at him. "You’ve known them for four minutes."
"I’ve been observing since before they were born," River said. "The angle changed slightly when Jade spoke his na versus when he explained his role. She responded more to the na."
A pause.
"That’s—" Sterling stopped. "That’s actually interesting."
"I know," River said.
Ripple had gone directly to Kael.
This made a certain sense, if you knew Ripple—the most gentle of the snakelings, the one who had always sought out the quiet ones, the ones who needed soone to press close without demand. Kael was deeply asleep, tucked against Naga’s coil, his deep-gold fur rising and falling in the slow rhythm of genuine rest.
Ripple looked at him for a long mont. Then lay down beside him, close but not touching, and just stayed there.
"You don’t have to do anything," Ripple told the sleeping cub, very softly. "I’ll just be here."
Kael’s ear flicked once.
And Ripple’s tongue flickered in happiness.
[Ripple-Kael interaction logged,] System said. [Classification: unconditional presence. This is going to be a very specific and important bond. Flagging for future observation.]
---
Leo ca back from his morning patrol to find his children occupied.
Solara had been very carefully relocated from the sleeping pile to Jade’s coils, where she lay draped like a small, imperious scarf, apparently content. Siddy and Liam were engaged in what could charitably be called a staring contest and less charitably called a dominance assessnt, both of them flat on the floor, neither blinking, the entire scenario radiating an energy that made Leo’s beastman’s instincts twitch even though nothing was technically happening. River and Raj were doing sothing that looked like a conversation—River speaking quietly, Raj listening with those calm honey-caral eyes, occasionally lifting one paw in what River was apparently interpreting as aningful responses. Sterling and Onyx were sitting beside Ripple and the still-sleeping Kael, watching with the patient attention of children who had learned that not everything required participation.
Leo stood in the entrance and took in the scene.
[Welco back,] System said, inside his mind—it had started doing this with all of them, an extension of its connection through Alex, and Leo was still deciding how he felt about it.
[Your children appear to be conducting a preliminary assessnt of their snake siblings. Or possibly vice versa. The directionality is sowhat unclear.]
"Who’s winning?" Leo asked quietly.
[It’s a draw. Liam and Siddy have been staring at each other for eleven minutes. Neither has blinked. I have conflicting data on whether this should be classified as aggression or friendship.]
"With those two," Leo said, stepping carefully around the staring contest to reach Alex’s side, "those might be the sa thing."
Reviews
All reviews (0)